Altered within- and between-host transmission under coinfection underpin parasite co-occurrence patterns in the wild.

Evol Ecol

Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, University of Helsinki, Viikinkaari 1 (PO box 65), 00014 Helsinki, Finland.

Published: May 2022

Unlabelled: Interactions among parasite species coinfecting the same host individual can have far reaching consequences for parasite ecology and evolution. How these within-host interactions affect epidemics may depend on two non-exclusive mechanisms: parasite growth and reproduction within hosts, and parasite transmission between hosts. Yet, how these two mechanisms operate under coinfection, and how sensitive they are to the composition of the coinfecting parasite community, remains poorly understood. Here, we test the hypothesis that the relationship between within- and between-host transmission of the fungal pathogen, is affected by co-occurring parasites infecting the host plant, . We conducted a field experiment manipulating the parasite community of transmission source plants, then tracked within-host transmission, as well as between-host transmission to naïve recipient plants. We find that coinfection with the powdery mildew pathogen, , causes increased between-host transmission of by affecting the number of infected flower stalks in the source plants, resulting from altered auto-infection. In contrast, coinfection with viruses did not have an effect on either within- or between-host transmission. We then analyzed data on the occurrence of in 2018 and the powdery mildew in a multi-year survey data set from natural host populations to test whether the positive association predicted by our experimental results is evident in field epidemiological data. Consistent with our experimental findings, we observed a positive association in the occurrence of and historical powdery mildew persistence. Jointly, our experimental and epidemiological results suggest that within- and between-host transmission of depends on the identity of coinfecting parasites, with potentially far-reaching effects on disease dynamics and parasite co-occurrence patterns in wild populations.

Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10682-022-10182-9.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9911512PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10682-022-10182-9DOI Listing

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